(water is wet and fire is hot).

    • @[email protected]
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      77 months ago

      Slightly less obnoxious, but equally ineffective; vote with your hands, your eyes, your feet. Don’t let them steal your labor your attention your time your anything. You can be passive and hold a strike. You van be active and strike back. I think a mix of both would be a lot more effective than just one.

      But whatever you do, if its not just useless theatrical bullshit (which isn’t to say all theatrical bullshit is useless; just the useless kinds) its going to be illegal, and will face state retribution, even if its explicitly legal and protected in your local constitution.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        Slightly less obnoxious, but equally ineffective; vote with your hands, your eyes, your feet. Don’t let them steal your labor your attention your time your anything. You can be passive and hold a strike. You van be active and strike back. I think a mix of both would be a lot more effective than just one.

        You can also strike without striking. There’s a huge fuss over “quiet quitting”/“work to rule”, where people are striking by only doing exactly what they’re paid for, rather than adding in the extra that has become the norm. They’re not adding extra hours or pulling extra duties.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          When I say ‘strike back’ the labor actions that come to mind all involve machine guns.

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        For whoever thinks not voting will be any form of good decision. Ask yourself this question.

        How can someone distinguish a not vote because your fine with how things are from a not vote out of protest?

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          Definitely not what I meant. My example would be more like refusing to pay taxes in protest.

          Except thankfully it’s not illegal to refuse to give money to corporations, just very difficult.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            While I did misunderstood the goal of your comment, sry for that, it still holds some truth and might be applied concept wise to what you meant.

            Refusing to pay taxes is, as much as refusing to vote politically, a refuse to participate. Why should someone get a say in something that they refuse to be a part of?

            We are on the same side, even if it’s not directly obvious. You showed that with you second point. By voting with you wallet for corporations that fulfill your values, you choose to give them more power over other corporations that don’t.

            The same concept applies to voting politically. You give your vote to a party that fulfills your values over a party that doesn’t.

            I the real world not paying taxes is not an option, as much as it’s not an option to not spend any money on any corporation, if your part of the society. We are able to choose in a given context, that for sure has its limitations.

            Let’s say your not happy with the possible options that you can vote for, be it a financial or a political vote, you are free to fill the niche you think is missing. Start being active politically or economically and if there are more people that think like you and act according to this, things can change.

            But if nobody does this, things will definitely move in the direction of the values from people that do the things above.

            There is the famous phrase. “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”